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Dive into the research topics where Elizabeth Lee is active.

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Featured researches published by Elizabeth Lee.


Biofouling | 2008

Combinatorial materials research applied to the development of new surface coatings IX: An investigation of novel antifouling/fouling-release coatings containing quaternary ammonium salt groups

Partha Majumdar; Elizabeth Lee; Nehal Patel; Kaley Ward; Shane J. Stafslien; Justin Daniels; Bret J. Chisholm; Philip Boudjouk; Maureen E. Callow; Stephanie E.M. Thompson

Polysiloxane coatings containing chemically-bound (“tethered”) quaternary ammonium salt (QAS) moieties were investigated for potential application as environmental-friendly coatings to control marine biofouling. A combinatorial/high-throughput approach was applied to the investigation to enable multiple variables to be probed simultaneously and efficiently. The variables investigated for the moisture-curable coatings included QAS composition, ie alkyl chain length, and concentration as well as silanol-terminated polysiloxane molecular weight. A total of 75 compositionally unique coatings were prepared and characterized using surface characterization techniques and biological assays. Biological assays were based on two different marine microorganisms, a bacterium, Cellulophaga lytica and a diatom, Navicula incerta, as well as a macrofouling alga, Ulva. The results of the study showed that all three variables influenced coating surface properties as well as antifouling (AF) and fouling-release (FR) characteristics. The incorporation of QAS moieties into a polysiloxane matrix generally resulted in an increase in coating surface hydrophobicity. Characterization of coating surface morphology revealed a heterogeneous, two-phase morphology for many of the coatings investigated. A correlation was found between water contact angle and coating surface roughness, with the contact angle increasing with increasing surface roughness. Coatings based on the QAS moiety containing the longest alkyl chain (18 carbons) displayed the highest micro-roughness and, thus, the most hydrophobic surfaces. With regard to AF and FR properties, coatings based on the 18 carbon QAS moieties were very effective at inhibiting C. lytica biofilm formation and enabling easy removal of Ulva sporelings (young plants) while coatings based on the 14 carbon QAS moities were very effective at inhibiting biofilm growth of N. incerta.


ACS Combinatorial Science | 2009

Combinatorial materials research applied to the development of new surface coatings XIII: an investigation of polysiloxane antimicrobial coatings containing tethered quaternary ammonium salt groups.

Partha Majumdar; Elizabeth Lee; Nathan Gubbins; David A. Christianson; Shane J. Stafslien; Justin Daniels; Lyndsi Vanderwal; James Bahr; Bret J. Chisholm

High-throughput biological assays were used to develop structure - antimicrobial relationships for polysiloxane coatings containing chemically bound (tethered) quaternary ammonium salt (QAS) moieties. The QAS-functional polysiloxanes were derived from solution blends of a silanol-terminated polydimethylsiloxane, a trimethoxysilane-functional QAS (QAS-TMS), and methylacetoxysilane. Since the QAS moieties provide antimicrobial activity through interaction with the microorganism cell wall, most of the compositional variables that were investigated were associated with the chemical structure of the QAS-TMS. Twenty different QAS-TMS were synthesized for the study and the antimicrobial activity of sixty unique polysiloxane coatings derived from these QAS-TMS determined toward Escherichia coli , Staphylococcus aureus , and Candida albicans . The results of the study showed that essentially all of the compositional variables significantly influenced antimicrobial activity. Surface characterization of these moisture-cured coatings using atomic force microscopy as well as water contact angle and water contact angle hysteresis measurements indicated that the compositional variables significantly affected coating surface morphology and surface chemistry. Overall, compositional variables that produced heterogeneous surface morphologies provided the highest antimicrobial activity suggesting that the antimicrobial activity was primarily derived from the relationship between coating chemical composition and self-assembly of QAS moieties at the coating/air interface. Using data modeling software, a narrow region of the compositional space was identified that provided broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity.


British Journal of Development Psychology | 2011

Peer socialization of masculinity and femininity: Differential effects of overt and relational forms of peer victimization

Elizabeth Lee; Wendy Troop-Gordon

Although peer influence has been implicated in recent theories of gender socialization, few investigations have tested whether childrens gendered behaviours change over time as a function of peer experiences and whether some peer experiences may exacerbate, rather than dampen, gender non-conformity. Accordingly, the current study examined prospective links between specific forms of peer victimization and childrens adherence to traditional gender roles. Peer reports of victimization and self-reports of engagement in stereotypically masculine and feminine activities were collected from 199 children (104 girls; 95 boys) in the Fall and Spring of their fifth-grade year. Multi-group path analysis was used to explore the relations between forms of victimization and masculinity and femininity for girls and boys. For girls, peer victimization predicted withdrawal from both feminine and masculine behaviours. For boys, physical, verbal, and general victimization predicted lower levels of feminine behaviours, but social exclusion forecast heightened engagement in traditionally feminine activities. These findings underscore how social experiences can amplify, as well as reduce, gender non-conformity.


Emotion | 2011

You never think about my feelings: interpersonal dominance as a predictor of emotion decoding accuracy.

Sara K. Moeller; Elizabeth Lee; Michael D. Robinson

Dominance and submission constitute fundamentally different social interaction strategies that may be enacted most effectively to the extent that the emotions of others are relatively ignored (dominance) versus noticed (submission). On the basis of such considerations, we hypothesized a systematic relationship between chronic tendencies toward high versus low levels of interpersonal dominance and emotion decoding accuracy in objective tasks. In two studies (total N = 232), interpersonally dominant individuals exhibited poorer levels of emotion recognition in response to audio and video clips (Study 1) and facial expressions of emotion (Study 2). The results provide a novel perspective on interpersonal dominance, suggest its strategic nature (Study 2), and are discussed in relation to Fiskes (1993) social-cognitive theory of power.


Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology | 2016

Visual Attention to Dynamic Scenes of Ambiguous Provocation and Children’s Aggressive Behavior

Wendy Troop-Gordon; Robert D. Gordon; Laura Vogel-Ciernia; Elizabeth Lee; Kari Jeanne Visconti

Research on biases in attention related to children’s aggression has yielded mixed results. Some research suggests that inattention to social cues and reliance on maladaptive social schemas underlie aggression. Other research suggests that maladaptive social schemas lead aggressive individuals to attend to nonhostile cues. The primary objective of this study was to test the proposition that aggression is related to delayed attention to cues followed by selective attention to nonhostile cues after the provocation has occurred. A second objective was to test whether these biases are associated with aggression only when children hold negative social schemas. The eye fixations of 70 children (34 boys, 36 girls; Mage = 11.71 years) were monitored with an eye tracker as they watched video clips of child actors portraying scenes of ambiguous provocation. Aggression was measured using peer-, teacher-, and parent-reports, and children completed a measure of antisocial and prosocial peer beliefs. Aggressive behavior was associated with greater time until fixation on the provocateur among youth who held antisocial peer beliefs. Aggression was also associated with greater time until fixation on an actor displaying empathy for the victim among children reporting low levels of prosocial peer beliefs. After the provocation, aggression was associated with suppressed attention to an amused peer among children who held negative peer beliefs. Increasing attention to cues in a scene of ambiguous provocation, in conjunction with fostering more positive beliefs about peers, may be effective in reducing hostile responding among aggressive youth.


Archive | 2009

Control of Pore Size in Epoxy Systems

Patricia S. Sawyer; Joseph Ludlow Lenhart; Elizabeth Lee; Alekhya Kallam; Partha Majumdar; Shawn M. Dirk; Nathan Gubbins; Bret J. Chisholm; Mathias Christopher Celina; James Bahr; Robert J. Klein

Both conventional and combinatorial approaches were used to study the pore formation process in epoxy based polymer systems. Sandia National Laboratories conducted the initial work and collaborated with North Dakota State University (NDSU) using a combinatorial research approach to produce a library of novel monomers and crosslinkers capable of forming porous polymers. The library was screened to determine the physical factors that control porosity, such as porogen loading, polymer-porogen interactions, and polymer crosslink density. We have identified the physical and chemical factors that control the average porosity, pore size, and pore size distribution within epoxy based systems.


Polymer | 2009

Synthesis and antimicrobial activity of quaternary ammonium-functionalized POSS (Q-POSS) and polysiloxane coatings containing Q-POSS

Partha Majumdar; Elizabeth Lee; Nathan Gubbins; Shane J. Stafslien; Justin Daniels; Clayton J. Thorson; Bret J. Chisholm


Journal of Coatings Technology and Research | 2008

Development of environmentally friendly, antifouling coatings based on tethered quaternary ammonium salts in a crosslinked polydimethylsiloxane matrix

Partha Majumdar; Elizabeth Lee; Nehal Patel; Shane J. Stafslien; Justin Daniels; Bret J. Chisholm


Sex Roles | 2011

Peer Processes and Gender Role Development: Changes in Gender Atypicality Related to Negative Peer Treatment and Children's Friendships

Elizabeth Lee; Wendy Troop-Gordon


Journal of Coatings Technology and Research | 2010

Antimicrobial activity of polysiloxane coatings containing quaternary ammonium-functionalized polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxane

Partha Majumdar; Jie He; Elizabeth Lee; Alekhya Kallam; Nathan Gubbins; Shane J. Stafslien; Justin Daniels; Bret J. Chisholm

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Bret J. Chisholm

North Dakota State University

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Partha Majumdar

North Dakota State University

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Justin Daniels

North Dakota State University

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Nathan Gubbins

North Dakota State University

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Shane J. Stafslien

North Dakota State University

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Wendy Troop-Gordon

North Dakota State University

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James Bahr

North Dakota State University

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Nehal Patel

North Dakota State University

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Alekhya Kallam

North Dakota State University

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Kaley Ward

North Dakota State University

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